is google book search good?

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REFLECTIONS ON THE GOOGLE BOOK SEARCH SETTLEMENT Pamela Samuelson, UC Berkeley OCLC/Kilgour Lecture, UNC April 14, 2009

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Lecture given at U North Carolina Law School on the Google Book Search Settlement

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Page 1: Is Google Book Search Good?

REFLECTIONS ON THE GOOGLE BOOK SEARCH

SETTLEMENT Pamela Samuelson, UC Berkeley

OCLC/Kilgour Lecture, UNC

April 14, 2009

Page 2: Is Google Book Search Good?

April 14, 2009 OCLC/Kilgour Lecture 2

OVERVIEW

• Why was G sued over the Book Search project? And how good was its fair use defense?

• What motivated settlement of the lawsuits?• What benefits will the settlement bring about? • What are risks, disadvantages, or problems with

the settlement?• What can the judge do? • What else could happen that might “fix”

problems the settlement may cause?

Page 3: Is Google Book Search Good?

April 14, 2009 OCLC/Kilgour Lecture 3

BOOK SEARCH PROJECT

• G began Book Search in 2004• G made arrangements with some

university research libraries to scan books in their collections– libraries to get back a digital library of its

collection– only G would have the corpus of all books– @ 7M books now available in BS

• G aiming for 15M

Page 4: Is Google Book Search Good?

April 14, 2009 OCLC/Kilgour Lecture 4

GBS ACCESS TERMS

• For books in the public domain, G makes whole book available

• As to books in ©, G now makes “snippets” available, but has not run ads vs. the snippets, has provided links so users could buy relevant books

• G also willing to take book out of GBS repository if © owner objects

• Partner program allows © owners to make special arrangements with G about how much of their books to make available; revenue-sharing arrangements

Page 5: Is Google Book Search Good?

April 14, 2009 OCLC/Kilgour Lecture 5

AUTHORS GUILD v. GOOGLE

• In 2005, AG + a few of its authors sued G for © infringement for scanning books, storing and processing the scanned books, & displaying snippets

• AG claimed this was a class action lawsuit brought on behalf of all authors whose books were scanned

• G claimed fair use, but also disputed AG as fair representative of the class

• 5 publishers brought similar suit vs. G; not initially a class action

Page 6: Is Google Book Search Good?

April 14, 2009 OCLC/Kilgour Lecture 6

FAIR USE re BOOK SEARCH?

Publishers/authors:- Commercial purpose; non-

transformative use- Systematic copying of © works

of all genres, creative works- Whole thing copied,

systematic, stored permanently

- Presume harm; harm because lack of control, risk of loss; we want to license such uses

Google:+ transformative; promoting public

access to information+ necessary to copy to index,

make snippets available; orphan books opened up

+ whole thing, but only snippets available unless au/pubr agrees to more thru partner program

+ transactions costs problems with clearing rights = market failure; GBS enhances market for many books (we’ll link to where you can buy them)

Page 7: Is Google Book Search Good?

April 14, 2009 OCLC/Kilgour Lecture 7

MOTIVATIONS TO SETTLE

• Litigation is expensive, would take many years to resolve definitively

• Outcome in doubt because close fair use case • Unclear whether class of authors would be certified; if

class not certified, G would take objecting authors’ books out of the repository; not much left to collect

• G facing very big damage exposure, injunction to destroy its scans of in-© works possible

• Settlement created an opportunity for a “win-win” if G willing to share revenue streams with AAP, AG

• G had better technology & ideas about how to create new markets for books in digital environment than AAP, AG

Page 8: Is Google Book Search Good?

April 14, 2009 OCLC/Kilgour Lecture 8

RISKS FOR GOOGLE

• Although G could rely on several fair use search engine cases, none was 2d Cir case; Ps brought case in SDNY where UMG v. MP3.com and AGU v. Texaco rulings were made– UMG v. MP3.com: unauthorized “ripping” of music from CDs to

make database of music to provide new service to owners of that music = infringement; ready to order $118M in SD

– AGU v. Texaco: scientist’s copying of 7 research articles for archival purposes = unfair use

• 6M books in © out of 7M in GBS x $750 = $4.5B– Whole lot more if up to $150K per work!

• G also defendant in Viacom v. YouTube case; facing substantial exposure in that case too

• Risks also for libraries as to digital copies from G

Page 9: Is Google Book Search Good?

April 14, 2009 OCLC/Kilgour Lecture 9

CORE OF SETTLEMENT

• G to provide $45M to compensate © owners as to books it has scanned

• G to fund creation of a new collecting society, the Book Rights Registry, for $34.5M

• Authors and publishers can sign up with BRR to get payments from that $45M + share in any new revenues BRR collects that are subject to the revenue split (BRR gets 67%)

• 3 initial services: – display parts of books in response to user queries (ads run vs.

queries)– sale of books to individuals (accessible only in the cloud)– sale of subscriptions to institutions

• G will continue to scan books, up to @ 15M

Page 10: Is Google Book Search Good?

April 14, 2009 OCLC/Kilgour Lecture 10

WHAT ABOUT LIBRARIES?

• Those who have contributed books to corpus will get back from G a digital copy of those books – The settlement means they will no longer be risking

liability for having contributed books to G or taking back digital copy

• Public libraries will be given 1 terminal each for accessing the corpus, but can’t print out or copy

• Many research libraries will be institutional subscribers to GBS, able to view whole works in the corpus, able to print out small # of pages

• But no special deal for public school libraries, gov’t libraries, other libraries

Page 11: Is Google Book Search Good?

April 14, 2009 OCLC/Kilgour Lecture 11

BENEFITS

• Removes a dark cloud of liability from the heads of G and cooperating libraries

• More public access to more books than if G had not undertaken to make GBS at all or if G restricted GBS to public domain books– Likely to show that “orphan” books have real value

• Revenues will flow to authors and publishers who register with the BRR

• Those authors and publishers who do not want their books in GBS can ask for removal

• New business models, choices for consumers

Page 12: Is Google Book Search Good?

April 14, 2009 OCLC/Kilgour Lecture 12

SO WHAT’S NOT TO LIKE?

1. G getting exclusive rights as to orphan books2. Other mass digitization projects may be

imperiled3. Settlement creates 2 complementary

monopolies—GBS & BRR—with power to set prices and other terms for access to books

4. BRR will have interests different from authors whose books make up most of the repository

5. No privacy guarantees6. Excessive fees to class action lawyers

Page 13: Is Google Book Search Good?

April 14, 2009 OCLC/Kilgour Lecture 13

ORPHAN WORKS

• Google will have a monopoly on making available “orphan books” – Estimated 75% of books in corpus– G able to monetize this as well through individual

sales, subscriptions, ads next to displays• BRR cannot license others to scan orphan

books because it can only license uses of books whose © owners have registered with it

• It is only because of the settlement of the class action that G can get this exclusive license– G would almost certainly have objected to the class

certification otherwise

Page 14: Is Google Book Search Good?

April 14, 2009 OCLC/Kilgour Lecture 14

IMPLICATIONS FOR OTHERS

• No one else (e.g., Amazon) can get an equivalent license to G’s without scanning books like G and hoping for a similar class action lawsuit vs. it, and then a settlement on the same terms!– Would this be too risky?

• Will G’s settlement of the lawsuit undercut fair use argument that later scanners might make for mass digitization? – Some say yes; G says no

• Settlement may also take some wind out of legislative push for “orphan works” legislation

Page 15: Is Google Book Search Good?

April 14, 2009 OCLC/Kilgour Lecture 15

TERMS & CONDITIONS

• BRR and G will set prices, other terms & conditions for books, subscriptions, new business models– G says that it will price to promote broad access, but if it attains

the monopoly that is consistent with the logic of the settlement, will it do so?

– BRR will have institutional bias vs. allowing or alerting authors to possibility of public domain, CC licenses for books in registry

– BRR unlikely to complain that prices are too high or DRM & license restrictions too severe

– If no competition as to orphan works, terms won’t get better, other innovations may not happen

• Researchers will have to get permission in advance from G to do research over the whole corpus

Page 16: Is Google Book Search Good?

April 14, 2009 OCLC/Kilgour Lecture 16

BRR

• BRR can license others (e.g., Amazon) to scan and make books available as to authors and publishers that have registered with it, but will BRR be willing to license them if this competes with the sweet deal it has with G?

• BRR will get 63% of the revenues from use of in-© books, even as to books written by authors who are not registered with the BRR!

• BRR will have board of half AG, half AAP representatives (who are copyright maximalists!)

• Neither AG nor AAP share the research values of the majority of authors whose works are in the corpus

• Collecting societies historically have engaged in anticompetitive acts, spend $$ on themselves, not distribute substantial sums to actual rights holders

Page 17: Is Google Book Search Good?

April 14, 2009 OCLC/Kilgour Lecture 17

LAWYER FEES

• 2 law firms involved, 1 for AAP, 1 for AG• Settlement will make $45.5M available to

compensate the class action lawyers– THAT’S MORE THAN ALL THE AUTHORS WHOSE

BOOKS ARE BEING SCANNED COMBINED!

• They didn’t work THAT hard• Is this an abuse of the class action process?• G would have fought class certification if

litigation went forward

Page 18: Is Google Book Search Good?

April 14, 2009 OCLC/Kilgour Lecture 18

PRIVACY

• Libraries who supplied the books to G have longstanding policies of respecting patron privacy as to books– Many librarians would take a bullet (metaphorically) before

violating user privacy• Nothing in the settlement agreement speaks about

privacy interests of users• G will be “selling” books to individuals that can only be

read in the cloud• G will be able to monitor what users are reading, etc.• Institutional subscribers may also care about privacy • G has thus far been unwilling to make commitments

about respecting GBS user privacy (even though willing to do so with other services, e.g., Google Health)

Page 19: Is Google Book Search Good?

April 14, 2009 OCLC/Kilgour Lecture 19

WHAT CAN THE JUDGE DO?

• Litigants cannot settle class action lawsuits without a judge approving the settlement

• The main ? before the court is whether the settlement is fair to the class– NOT whether the settlement is in the public interest– Possible some members of the class will object to the settlement

(e.g., scholars who object to AG, AAP as representative of the class)

– Also possible for members of the class to opt out

• Some likelihood of interventions – My firm will be affected by the settlement, even though it is not a

party to the lawsuit (maybe Amazon, MS, or Yahoo)

• But judge has no power to change the settlement

Page 20: Is Google Book Search Good?

April 14, 2009 OCLC/Kilgour Lecture 20

OTHER OPTIONS

• If the settlement is approved, antitrust oversight may be needed because the logic of the settlement makes likely that GBS/BRR may ultimately engage in monopolistic abuses

• Antitrust authorities could require G to give a license to others to scan orphan books

• Congress could pass legislation to allow other mass digitization to happen or to insist on privacy protections for users

• The judge could say no, in which case Google would have to defend the fair use claim, challenge class certification

Page 21: Is Google Book Search Good?

April 14, 2009 OCLC/Kilgour Lecture 21

CONCLUSION

• If it were up to me, I would not approve the settlement• AG does not represent the interests of the scholars who

wrote books that constitute the overwhelming majority of works in the corpus

• Libraries may rue the day that AG v. G settled– Think about the complaints vs. journal publishers

• This settlement is a privately negotiated compulsory license to orphan books, and a major restructuring of the future of the book industry w/o meaningful government oversight

• It is, however, so complicated that it’s not getting the attention in the scholarly communities that it should have

• Judge may approve unless well-crafted objections soon